Mass point geometry explained
Mass point geometry, colloquially known as mass points, is a problem-solving technique in geometry which applies the physical principle of the center of mass to geometry problems involving triangles and intersecting cevians.[1] All problems that can be solved using mass point geometry can also be solved using either similar triangles, vectors, or area ratios,[2] but many students prefer to use mass points. Though modern mass point geometry was developed in the 1960s by New York high school students,[3] the concept has been found to have been used as early as 1827 by August Ferdinand Möbius in his theory of homogeneous coordinates.[4]
Definitions
The theory of mass points is defined according to the following definitions:[5]
- Mass Point - A mass point is a pair
, also written as
, including a mass,
, and an ordinary point,
on a plane.
- Coincidence - We say that two points
and
coincide if and only if
and
.
- Addition - The sum of two mass points
and
has mass
and point
where
is the point on
such that
. In other words,
is the fulcrum point that perfectly balances the points
and
. An example of mass point addition is shown at right. Mass point addition is
closed,
commutative, and
associative.
- Scalar Multiplication - Given a mass point
and a positive real
scalar
, we define multiplication to be
. Mass point scalar multiplication is
distributive over mass point addition.
Methods
Concurrent cevians
First, a point is assigned with a mass (often a whole number, but it depends on the problem) in the way that other masses are also whole numbers.The principle of calculation is that the foot of a cevian is the addition (defined above) of the two vertices (they are the endpoints of the side where the foot lie).For each cevian, the point of concurrency is the sum of the vertex and the foot.Each length ratio may then be calculated from the masses at the points. See Problem One for an example.
Splitting masses
Splitting masses is the slightly more complicated method necessary when a problem contains transversals in addition to cevians. Any vertex that is on both sides the transversal crosses will have a split mass. A point with a split mass may be treated as a normal mass point, except that it has three masses: one used for each of the two sides it is on, and one that is the sum of the other two split masses and is used for any cevians it may have. See Problem Two for an example.
Other methods
- Routh's theorem - Many problems involving triangles with cevians will ask for areas, and mass points does not provide a method for calculating areas. However, Routh's theorem, which goes hand in hand with mass points, uses ratios of lengths to calculate the ratio of areas between a triangle and a triangle formed by three cevians.
- Special cevians - When given cevians with special properties, like an angle bisector or an altitude, other theorems may be used alongside mass point geometry that determine length ratios. One very common theorem used likewise is the angle bisector theorem.
- Stewart's theorem - When asked not for the ratios of lengths but for the actual lengths themselves, Stewart's theorem may be used to determine the length of the entire segment, and then mass points may be used to determine the ratios and therefore the necessary lengths of parts of segments.
- Higher dimensions - The methods involved in mass point geometry are not limited to two dimensions; the same methods may be used in problems involving tetrahedra, or even higher-dimensional shapes, though it is rare that a problem involving four or more dimensions will require use of mass points.
Examples
Problem One
Problem. In triangle
,
is on
so that
and
is on
so that
. If
and
intersect at
and line
intersects
at
, compute
and
.
Solution. We may arbitrarily assign the mass of point
to be
. By ratios of lengths, the masses at
and
must both be
. By summing masses, the masses at
and
are both
. Furthermore, the mass at
is
, making the mass at
have to be
Therefore
and
\tfrac{OD}{OA}=\tfrac{3}{2}
. See diagram at right.
Problem Two
Problem. In triangle
,
,
, and
are on
,
, and
, respectively, so that
,
, and
. If
and
intersect at
, compute
and
.
Solution. As this problem involves a transversal, we must use split masses on point
. We may arbitrarily assign the mass of point
to be
. By ratios of lengths, the mass at
must be
and the mass at
is split
towards
and
towards
. By summing masses, we get the masses at
,
, and
to be
,
, and
, respectively. Therefore
\tfrac{OD}{OE}=\tfrac{25}{15}=\tfrac{5}{3}
and
\tfrac{OC}{OF}=\tfrac{21}{10+9}=\tfrac{21}{19}
.
Problem Three
Problem. In triangle
, points
and
are on sides
and
, respectively, and points
and
are on side
with
between
and
.
intersects
at point
and
intersects
at point
. If
,
, and
, compute
.
Solution. This problem involves two central intersection points,
and
, so we must use multiple systems.
- System One. For the first system, we will choose
as our central point, and we may therefore ignore segment
and points
,
, and
. We may arbitrarily assign the mass at
to be
, and by ratios of lengths the masses at
and
are
and
, respectively. By summing masses, we get the masses at
,
, and
to be 10, 9, and 13, respectively. Therefore,
\tfrac{EO1}{BO1}=\tfrac{3}{10}
and
\tfrac{EO1}{BE}=\tfrac{3}{13}
.
- System Two. For the second system, we will choose
as our central point, and we may therefore ignore segment
and points
and
. As this system involves a transversal, we must use split masses on point
. We may arbitrarily assign the mass at
to be
, and by ratios of lengths, the mass at
is
and the mass at
is split
towards
and 2 towards
. By summing masses, we get the masses at
,
, and
to be 4, 6, and 10, respectively. Therefore,
\tfrac{BO2}{EO2}=\tfrac{5}{3+2}=1
and
\tfrac{BO2}{BE}=\tfrac{1}{2}
.
- Original System. We now know all the ratios necessary to put together the ratio we are asked for. The final answer may be found as follows:
See also
Notes
- Rhoad, R., Milauskas, G., and Whipple, R. Geometry for Enjoyment and Challenge. McDougal, Littell & Company, 1991.
- Web site: Archived copy . 2009-06-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100720083314/http://mathcircle.berkeley.edu/archivedocs/2007_2008/lectures/0708lecturesps/MassPointsBMC07.ps . 2010-07-20 . dead .
- Rhoad, R., Milauskas, G., and Whipple, R. Geometry for Enjoyment and Challenge. McDougal, Littell & Company, 1991
- D. Pedoe Notes on the History of Geometrical Ideas I: Homogeneous Coordinates. Math Magazine (1975), 215-217.
- H. S. M. Coxeter, Introduction to Geometry, pp. 216-221, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1969